A Western Australian woman who faked her credentials and posed as her own referee to land a top South Australian government job has been jailed for at least 12 months. Veronica Hilda Theriault pleaded guilty to deception and dishonesty charges over her dodgy resume which landed her a plum position in the Department of Premier and Cabinet in 2017. In the District Court on Tuesday she was jailed for just over two years with a non-parole period of one year. Judge Michael Boylan described her offending as serious and with an element of planning. "You fraudulently obtained employment for which you were paid a large salary and in the course of which you may have had access to sensitive material," the judge said. Theriault, of Claremont in WA, was suffering from a bipolar disorder at the time and it was a deterioration in her mental condition which first made SA officials suspicious. By that stage, Theriault had worked in her position for just over a month and had been paid $33,000 of her annual salary of $270,000. Judge Boylan said in relation to one deception charge, Theriault had given SA government officials the name of a woman from a previous employer who would act as a referee. But he said when a representative from the Department of Premier and Cabinet spoke to the woman, who gave "glowing feedback" about Theriault's performance it was actually the accused who was impersonating her. In earlier sentencing submissions, defence counsel described Theriault's offending as not particularly sophisticated and said it involved a unique set of circumstances that were unlikely to be repeated. The court also heard that her crimes could have been detected much earlier than they actually were and that the 46-year-old was "deeply ashamed and embarrassed". But the prosecution said there was an element of planning in her offending and it was not isolated. The court was told she had used resumes with false information to obtain employment at two other companies in 2012 and 2014 and to win an award in 2014. It was alleged that Theriault's motive for her crimes was to benefit financially. Theriault also had her brother, Alan Hugh Melville Corkill, write a false reference claiming she was a senior leadership official with 20 years of experience. Theriault later hired Corkill on contracts that earned him more than $23,000 in three weeks. Australian Associated Press

SA govt staffer jailed over dodgy resume

Veronica Theriault pleaded guilty to deception and dishonesty charges over her dodgy resume.

A Western Australian woman who faked her credentials and posed as her own referee to land a top South Australian government job has been jailed for at least 12 months.

Veronica Hilda Theriault pleaded guilty to deception and dishonesty charges over her dodgy resume which landed her a plum position in the Department of Premier and Cabinet in 2017.

In the District Court on Tuesday she was jailed for just over two years with a non-parole period of one year. Judge Michael Boylan described her offending as serious and with an element of planning.

"You fraudulently obtained employment for which you were paid a large salary and in the course of which you may have had access to sensitive material," the judge said.

Theriault, of Claremont in WA, was suffering from a bipolar disorder at the time and it was a deterioration in her mental condition which first made SA officials suspicious.

By that stage, Theriault had worked in her position for just over a month and had been paid $33,000 of her annual salary of $270,000.

Judge Boylan said in relation to one deception charge, Theriault had given SA government officials the name of a woman from a previous employer who would act as a referee.

But he said when a representative from the Department of Premier and Cabinet spoke to the woman, who gave "glowing feedback" about Theriault's performance it was actually the accused who was impersonating her.

In earlier sentencing submissions, defence counsel described Theriault's offending as not particularly sophisticated and said it involved a unique set of circumstances that were unlikely to be repeated.

The court also heard that her crimes could have been detected much earlier than they actually were and that the 46-year-old was "deeply ashamed and embarrassed".

But the prosecution said there was an element of planning in her offending and it was not isolated.

The court was told she had used resumes with false information to obtain employment at two other companies in 2012 and 2014 and to win an award in 2014.

It was alleged that Theriault's motive for her crimes was to benefit financially.

Theriault also had her brother, Alan Hugh Melville Corkill, write a false reference claiming she was a senior leadership official with 20 years of experience.

Theriault later hired Corkill on contracts that earned him more than $23,000 in three weeks.